Dollar faces pressure from Trump's Fed comments

business August 21, 2018 12:42

By Agence France-Presse
Hong Kong

2,445 Viewed

The dollar dipped Tuesday in Asia after Donald Trump hit out at the Federal Reserve's interest rate rises and accused it of not backing his economic plan, while equity traders were cautious ahead of highly anticipated China-US trade talks.

The greenback, which has been on the ascent in recent months as US borrowing costs have gone up and the economy improves, stumbled after Trump's latest criticism of the central bank.

In an interview with Reuters, the president said "I'm not thrilled" with the rate hikes under new Fed boss Jerome Powell, repeating comments made last month about the bank's tightening measures.

When asked if he believed in the Fed's independence, he refused to say yes, telling the reporter: "I believe in the Fed doing what's good for the country."

He also accused the European Union and China of manipulating their currencies, adding that Beijing was weakening the yuan to offset the effects of US tariffs.

While analysts said it was unlikely Trump's remarks would make much difference to the Fed's decision-making -- Powell has said in the past "we don't take political considerations into account" -- the greenback was weaker against most other currencies.

The Fed is expected to lift rates twice more this year.

The pound and euro enjoyed some much-needed buying, while the yen was also up.

Higher-yielding and emerging market currencies -- from South Korea's won and the Indonesian rupiah to the Australian dollar and Mexican peso -- were also higher, having come under pressure last week from the Turkey financial crisis.

Equities swing

After the previous day's broad gains, equity markets fluctuated as traders turn their attention to the China-US talks, which are due Wednesday and Thursday.

Tokyo was flat by the break, having pared earlier losses, while Hong Kong edged up 0.1 percent and Shanghai jumped 0.8 percent while Seoul was 0.5 percent higher. Taipei and Jakarta also rose.

But Sydney shed 0.9 percent and Singapore was 0.4 percent off while Wellington dipped 0.2 percent.

The meeting is the first since the world's top two economies started imposing tit-for-tat tariffs on billions of dollars' worth of goods, with the Wall Street Journal saying they are aimed at smoothing the way ahead of a November summit.

They also come despite Washington continuing to push through fresh measures slated for Thursday.

However, JP Morgan Asset Management global market strategist Tai Hui said: "Given the little progress made on the US-China negotiations in the past six months, investors' expectations are still low.

"Ongoing negotiation is good news, and that's what the market is riding on at this stage, but a sustainable agreement to end this tension still seems unlikely at this point."

He added: "If China's earlier offer to buy US products and open up its market did not convince the US to de-escalate, it would take more creativity from Beijing to reach a compromise."